People who live near wind turbines strongly prefer wind over power plants that generate electricity from fossil fuels, nuclear and even solar, a new study shows. The results apply across demographics in urban or rural areas, red and blue states, and even in coal-producing states.

Heat-induced heart attacks are increasing, suggesting that climate change poses a risk to cardiovascular health. The German study also shows that the health impacts of climate change aren’t limited to urban areas.

Solar geoengineering raises the risk of intensifying storms and drought. But a new study finds that halving global warming by using just the right amount of geoengineering could eliminate these side effects.